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| quote: | Originally posted by MrJiveBoJingles
There are lots of things you could say...
Here's a proposition, and maybe you'll agree with it:
The simple fact that a track "sounds professional" doesn't necessarily mean that it ought to be released, played out, or doted on.
I'm reminded of something that Bob Moog said in an interview not too long before he died:
"To the extent that more people now are being able to engage directly in making pop music I think the advances have a positive direction, shall we say. Everybody has certain reservations about how easy it is now - not to make really original good music - but to make pale imitations of music. Something that appears to be music, but is really just something mechanical or filled with gimmicks. One always has to remember these days where the garbage pail is, because it's so easy to make sounds, and to put sounds together into something that appears to be music, but it's just as hard as it always was to make good music."
I think that among a lot of newbie producers there's a kind of aggressive and unapologetic ignorance of general musical principles and history, and a desire simply to make something that "sounds good" rather than any genuine drive toward originality or personal expression.
How many producers these days struggle with thoughts like this?:
'Okay, let's say I can make something that sounds nice and glossy and professional and fits right in with any of the tracks released on my favorite labels -- but do I really have any compelling ideas and feelings to express or evoke with my music? And if not, why the hell am I doing this?'
IMO, far too few people are thinking in those kinds of terms, and that's why there's so much derivative crap: legions of essentially unoriginal and boring producers simply won't keep their hands off of the synthesizers and sequencers, because those kind of thoughts don't occur to them, or they just don't want to face the fact that they are "composing by numbers" rather than adding something that really deserves to be remembered.
And that would be fine -- I don't have anything against people making music in their spare time simply for their own gratification -- but it's because it's so easy now to publicize the results of this kind of uninspired doodling that we have the current situation. |
This is true ,i also think that many young producers think like that, "lets produce a nice track for the sake of producing it". But, thinking of it, definitely NOT all of them thing like that.
Think is, that even by producing new, complex melodies doesn't equal to innovation to our "experienced trance ears". That is, even if a producer comes with a nice complex long melody, i bet that the majority of us would criticise it as boring "ASOT trance", simply due to the fact that it has the same 7-9 minute intro-break-outro super-saw lead-line status (structure). Recently, i took a listen to some new epic trance tunes in Youtube to find-out more about the current state of the genre (i rarely listen to trance these times), and i noticed, that whilst the structure is bloody boring and uninspired, using the same synths and ideas (to the point that you can't distinquish between producers!), a FEW (not all) of the tracks had very complex, non-generic lead-lines (exceeding 16-note stabs). Some tracks like Airbase- "Escape", Cape Town- "Touch the Sky, Talk to the Stars" , Solar Express- "Magma", Leon Bolier- "Ocean Drive Boulevard", Mike Foyle- "Fire-Fly", Lolo- "Who Are You", Daniel Kandi- "Make Me Believe" and a few others were IMO distinct melodic-wise from the rest of the trance-blob. Problem is that:
1) NUMBER OF RELEASES:
There are massive amounts of present trance releases which sound similar, and hence better releases tend to get lost within these waves of releases.
2) ACTUAL SIMILARITY:
Even these better releases share similar sounds (maybe not exactly similar, but most of them indeed share),ideas and structure. That is, whilst they don't lack in "Musicality", they lack in INNOVATION. That is IMO, "INNOVATION" is not always equal to "MUSICIANSHIP" and "INSPIRATION". For the most experienced listeners, this is a massive let-down.
3) PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTOR OF EXPERIENCE:
Continouing directly from the second factor, most experienced listeners are so fond with the present intro-break-anthemic-lead-line-super-saw-outro structure of trance, that they don't even bother to listen to any epic/melodic-trance tunes at all. In psychological terms, they have become "habituated" to the sound, to the point that they desperately need something "more" in order to get their "fix" (the "habituation", and its' opossite mechanism called "sensitivisation", are present in almsot ALL psycho-affective processes). Probably many people here used to receive goosebumbs when the break and the super-saw lead came in full effect. Unfortunately, due to extensive over-use of the current trick and sound, this specific structure gradually lost its effect on the minds of most experienced listeners, reaching a point that not only it doesn't evoke any response, but on the contrary, causes feelings of boredom or, no feelings at all (causing extensive hate in TA!).
Ofcourse,as i said before, the structure must be distinquished from its' content. IMO (and as i stated before) some melodies of modern tunes are quite good (i imagined some of them being played by a different instrument such an an electric quitar or a violin and they were "still" nice or actually, nicer...!), and i also think that such long melodies would generally never be found in older epic-trance tracks before 2001. Problem is, that such nice themes and ideas get lost in this boring samey-same epic-trance structure which is here from 1998 or something, making all of us more experienced listeners get bored to hell. Ofcourse, the problem here is "US" and not the actual music. Proof of this is that today's trance has a substantive amounts of dedicated youngsters which love their music.
Still, the idea and structure must change, since they are extremely over-used. Melodies can still grow bigger, i actually like that.
Last edited by PETRAN on Apr-27-2008 at 04:01
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